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April 29, 2004 -- The State Board of Regents Thursday
selected Michael K. Young as the 14th President of the University
of Utah. Young, 54, is currently the Dean of the George Washington
University Law School in Washington, D.C. President Young will
assume his duties this summer. He will succeed J. Bernard Machen,
who left January 1 to accept the Presidency of the University
of Florida, and Dr. Lorris Betz who has served as Interim President.
Dr. Betz will resume his previous roles as Senior Vice President
for Health Sciences, Dean of the School of Medicine and Chief
Executive Officer of the University of Utah Health System.
President Young’s selection comes after an extensive national
search which considered 147 candidates from most states in the
United States and three foreign countries. A 21-member Search
Committee, chaired by Regent James S. Jardine, narrowed the search
to three finalists, which were announced last week.
Board of Regents Vice Chair George E. Mantes noted that the
Board “faced a difficult decision, given the personal qualities
and experience of each of the finalists. In selecting President
Young we believe we have found the person best prepared to lead
our Flagship University into the future. He has the right combination
of experience and leadership skills. The Regents have every confidence
that he will be an outstanding leader and President.”
President Young brings to the University of Utah considerable
academic experience, including more than 25 years as a faculty
member and the past six years as Dean and Lobinger Professor of
Comparative Law and Jurisprudence at the George Washington University
Law School. President Young also brings significant government
experience as a former official of the United States Department
of State. Prior to coming to George Washington in 1998, President
Young was on the faculty of Columbia University where he was the
Fuyo Professor of Japanese Law (1978-1998). While at Columbia
Law School, he was also the Director of the Center for Japanese
Legal Studies (1985-1998), Director of the Center for Korean Legal
Studies (1995-1998) and Co-Director of the Program on Religion,
Human Rights and Religious Freedom (1994-1998). In 1989 he was
appointed as the Deputy Legal Adviser for the U.S. State Department
until being appointed as the Deputy Under Secretary for Economic
and Agricultural Affairs in 1991, and from 1992-1993 he served
as the Ambassador for Trade and Environmental Affairs.
As Dean of the George Washington University Law School he was
instrumental in the school seeing an increase in the mean GPA
and LSAT scores of students, strengthening the school’s
profile of minority students including the largest percentage
of African-Americans of any “selective” national law
school, and significantly expanding the career development office
to assist graduates with job placements. He also increased the
amount and availability of research grants and created a number
of areas of excellence recognized internationally, including the
Sloan Program in Corporate Responsibility and Accountability,
Joint Masters Degree Program in International Intellectual Property,
Domestic Violence Clinic, and International Human Rights Clinic.
He is currently serving his second term as Chair of the U.S. Commission
on International Religious Freedom, a major federal advisory commission
created by Congress in 1998 to advise the President, the Secretary
of State, the National Security Advisor and the Congress on U.S.
foreign policy and ways in which the United States can more effectively
deploy its foreign policy to advance the cause of religious liberties
around the world. He has served on the Commission since 1998.
In accepting his appointment President Young stated, “I
appreciate the confidence entrusted in me by the Board of Regents.
It is a wonderful opportunity to be asked to come to the University
of Utah, which has a wonderful reputation in a number of areas.
I look forward to working with the excellent administrators, faculty,
and staff of the University, getting to know the students and
becoming part of the larger Utah community. Suzan and I have loved
Utah for a very long time, and to be able to return to this state
for this purpose is very gratifying.”
President Young received a B.A. (Summa Cum Laude with Highest
Honors) in Political Science and Japanese from Brigham Young University.
He earned a J.D. from Harvard Law School (Magna Cum Laude) where
he served for two years on the Harvard Law Review. Following law
school he clerked with then U.S. Supreme Court Associate Justice
William H. Rehnquist.
President Young is married to the former Suzan Stewart, a Registered
Nurse, is a native of Orem, Utah. She is also a graduate of Brigham
Young University. President and Mrs. Young are the parents of
three children: Stewart, a third-year law student at Stanford
University, Kathryn, a senior at the U.S. Air Force Academy, and
Andrew, a senior at George Washington University.
The University of Utah is the flagship institution of the Utah
System of Higher Education. Founded in 1850, it is the first and
largest public higher education institution in Utah, with more
than 28,000 students and a campus comprising almost 1,500 acres
in the eastern foothills of Salt Lake City. A major academic and
research institution with an extensive health sciences center,
the University offers majors in 72 subjects at the undergraduate
level and more than 90 major fields of study at the graduate level
including law and medical schools.
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